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Craig Taborn Trio: Chants
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Pianist Craig Taborn's first ECM Records release under his own name, Avenging Angel (2011), garnered well-deserved praise as a worthy entry into the German label's long line of solo piano recordings by stellar artists such as Paul Bley, Chick Corea and, of course, Keith Jarrett. With Chants, a piano trio outing, Taborn will be held up for comparison against the label's ongoing piano trio explorations by Marcin Wasilewski, Stefano Battaglia, Bobo Stenson, Benedikt Jahnel, and (again, of course) Keith Jarrett. And it must be said that Taborn and his trio matesbassist Thomas Morgan and drummer Gerald Cleaverstack up against the competition extremely well.
Avenging Angel is a very good recording, with Taborn's singular vision, alone at the keyboard, shining through. It is quirky, intense, cerebral and idiosyncratic, and unrelentingly surprising. Chants is better. Like fellow pianist Brad Mehldau, Tabornin order to rise to the highest level of his artistryneeds an ensemble; he needs to respond to other musicians. With Morgan and Cleaver he has found the perfect foils.
The opener, "Saints," has a relentless momentum that shiftsand it's anyone's guess which of the trio signaled the shiftinto a floating, free-form reverie in which Taborn maintains an intensity, and a density of notes, that eventually leads back into more forward momentum. "Beat the Ground" begins with a repeated piano phrase in front of Morgan's loping bass, and Cleaver's drum tumult. It's a subversive sound, a musical accompaniment to dark forces mobilizing.
The compelling, edge-of-the-seat one-two punch of the first two tunes leads into the gear shift of "In Chant," a sound full of mystery as Taborn employs space and spare, well-chosen notes and delicacy of touch, with a intricate segment of bass and drums interplay, with the piano laying out, that's as profound-sounding and as gorgeous as it gets, with Cleaver soundingwith the whispering cymbals and gentle friction and soft almost subliminal percussionas if he's involved in a try-out to fill drummer Paul Motian's shoes, employing subtlety and seductive complexities and orchestral percussion explorations, acing the audition.
"Hot Blood" is a tight, agitated, angular four minutes, leading into the disc's centerpiece, the near-thirteen minute "All True Night/Future Perfect." This is where the genius of this trio blossoms. On a sprawling tune that drifts through different dimensions, the trio enters a Zen state of cohesive improvisation, a beautifully surreal dreamscape born of an ego-less equilibrium.
Craig Taborn's sideman/worked-with resume is huge. He hasn't been so prolific as a leader. But he has established himself as a rare original. And with his move to ECM Records, for 2011's Avenging Angel and now with, especially, Chants, he has moved into the category of top level jazz pianists.
Avenging Angel is a very good recording, with Taborn's singular vision, alone at the keyboard, shining through. It is quirky, intense, cerebral and idiosyncratic, and unrelentingly surprising. Chants is better. Like fellow pianist Brad Mehldau, Tabornin order to rise to the highest level of his artistryneeds an ensemble; he needs to respond to other musicians. With Morgan and Cleaver he has found the perfect foils.
The opener, "Saints," has a relentless momentum that shiftsand it's anyone's guess which of the trio signaled the shiftinto a floating, free-form reverie in which Taborn maintains an intensity, and a density of notes, that eventually leads back into more forward momentum. "Beat the Ground" begins with a repeated piano phrase in front of Morgan's loping bass, and Cleaver's drum tumult. It's a subversive sound, a musical accompaniment to dark forces mobilizing.
The compelling, edge-of-the-seat one-two punch of the first two tunes leads into the gear shift of "In Chant," a sound full of mystery as Taborn employs space and spare, well-chosen notes and delicacy of touch, with a intricate segment of bass and drums interplay, with the piano laying out, that's as profound-sounding and as gorgeous as it gets, with Cleaver soundingwith the whispering cymbals and gentle friction and soft almost subliminal percussionas if he's involved in a try-out to fill drummer Paul Motian's shoes, employing subtlety and seductive complexities and orchestral percussion explorations, acing the audition.
"Hot Blood" is a tight, agitated, angular four minutes, leading into the disc's centerpiece, the near-thirteen minute "All True Night/Future Perfect." This is where the genius of this trio blossoms. On a sprawling tune that drifts through different dimensions, the trio enters a Zen state of cohesive improvisation, a beautifully surreal dreamscape born of an ego-less equilibrium.
Craig Taborn's sideman/worked-with resume is huge. He hasn't been so prolific as a leader. But he has established himself as a rare original. And with his move to ECM Records, for 2011's Avenging Angel and now with, especially, Chants, he has moved into the category of top level jazz pianists.
Track Listing
Saints; Beat The Ground; In Chant; Hot Blood; All True Night / Future Perfect; Cracking Hearts; Silver Ghosts; Silver Days Or Love; Speak The Name.
Personnel
Craig Taborn
pianoCraig Taborn: piano; Thomas Morgan: double bass; Gerald Cleaver: drums.
Album information
Title: Chants | Year Released: 2013 | Record Label: ECM Records
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Craig Taborn Trio
CD/LP/Track Review
Craig Taborn
Dan McClenaghan
ECM Records
United States
New York
New York City
Paul Bley
Chick Corea
Keith Jarrett
Marcin Wasilewski
Stefano Battaglia
Bobo Stenson
Benedikt Jahnel
Thomas Morgan
Gerald Cleaver
brad mehldau
Paul Motian
Chants